Roxgold Inc. announced additional results from the newest high grade deposit, Koula, at the Séguéla Gold Project (“Séguéla”) located in Côte d’Ivoire. Séguéla Gold Project, Côte d’Ivoire: Highlights from Reverse Circulation (“RC”) and Diamond tail (“RD”) drilling: Koula: 14 metres (“m”) at 42.9 grams per tonne gold (“g/t Au”) in drill hole SGRD1000 from 61m including 3m at 83.7 g/t Au from 62m and 1m at 263.0 g/t Au from 67m and 1m at 46.1 g/t Au from 74m; 11m at 46.2 g/t Au in drill hole SGRC799 from 48m including 3m at 143.6 g/t Au from 48m and 2m at 36.5 g/t Au from 57m; 18m at 22.1 g/t Au in drill hole SGRD800 from 175m including 7m at 40.1 g/t Au from 176m and 1m at 32.8 g/t Au from 186m; 16m at 21.3 g/t Au in drill hole SGRC982 from 174m including 2m at 82.0 g/t Au from 177m; 24m at 8.6 g/t Au in drill hole SGRD978 from 185m including 1m at 63.9 g/t Au from 206m; 21m at 9.2 g/t Au in drill hole SGRD1022 from 160m including 3m at 39.1 g/t Au from 166m Koula: Located approximately 1km to the east of Antenna, Koula was discovered through field reconnaissance and coincident recent artisanal workings in an area previously considered to be a lower exploration priority. A 4 rig infill program of RC and diamond drilling is 80% complete with the primary objective of infilling the deposit to 25m centres to support an upgraded Indicated classification. This further supports its rapid advancement and inclusion in the forthcoming Feasibility Study. Mineralization is hosted by quartz-carbonate veining associated with a well developed mylonitic fabric within and along the interpreted margins of a tholeiitic basalt which in turn has been tightly folded. Coarse gold is commonly recorded in the higher grade zones, with drilling highlighting a consistent moderate southerly plunge to the high grade core over at least 350m, and where it remains open to the south with hole SGRD971 intersecting 14m at 4.3 g/t Au from 273m downhole. Highlights from the Indicated infill drilling program at Koula include: 14 metres (“m”) at 42.9 grams per tonne gold (“g/t Au”) in drill hole SGRD1000 from 61m including 3m at 83.7 g/t Au from 62m and 1m at 263.0 g/t Au from 67m and 1m at 46.1 g/t Au from 74m; 11m at 46.2 g/t Au in drill hole SGRC799 from 48m including 3m at 143.6 g/t Au from 48m and 2m at 36.5 g/t Au from 57m; 18m at 22.1 g/t Au in drill hole SGRD800 from 175m including 7m at 40.1 g/t Au from 176m and 1m at 32.8 g/t Au from 186m; 16m at 21.3 g/t Au in drill hole SGRC982 from 174m including 2m at 82.0 g/t Au from 177m; 24m at 8.6 g/t Au in drill hole SGRD978 from 185m including 1m at 63.9 g/t Au from 206m; 21m at 9.2 g/t Au in drill hole SGRD1022 from 160m including 3m at 39.1 g/t Au from 166m; 10m at 14.6 g/t Au in drill hole SGRC989 from 74m including 2m at 39.0 g/t Au from 74m; 6m at 21.2 g/t Au in drill hole SGRD980 from 142m including 2m at 55.2 g/t Au from 145m; 11m at 11.4 g/t Au in drill hole SGRC979 from 17m including 3m at 35.2 g/t Au from 18m. Quality Assurance/Quality Control: All drilling data completed by Roxgold utilized the following procedures and methodologies. All drilling was carried out under the supervision of Roxgold personnel. RC drilling used a 5.25 inch face sampling pneumatic hammer with samples collected into 60 litre plastic bags. Samples were kept dry by maintaining enough air pressure to exclude groundwater inflow. If water ingress exceeded the air pressure, RC drilling was stopped, and drilling converted to diamond core tails. Aircore (“AC”) drilling was collected in one metre intervals and sampled in a similar fashion to RC methods. Once collected, RC and AC samples were riffle split through a three-tier splitter to yield a 12.5% representative sample for submission to the analytical laboratory. The residual 87.5% sample were stored at the drill site until assay results were received and validated. Coarse reject samples for all mineralized samples corresponding to significant intervals are retained and stored on-site at the Company controlled core yard. DD drill holes were drilled with HQ sized diamond drill bits. The core was logged, marked up for sampling using standard lengths of one metre. Samples were then cut into equal halves using a diamond saw. One half of the core was left in the original core box and stored in a secure location at the Company core yard at Séguéla. The other half was sampled, catalogued and placed into sealed bags and securely stored at the site until shipment. All Séguéla RC, AC and DD core samples were shipped to ALS Laboratories preparation laboratory in Yamoussoukro for preparation. Samples were dried and crushed by the Lab and a 250-gram split prepared from the coarse crushed material, prior to pulverization and preparation of a 200g sample. Samples are then shipped via commercial courier to ALS’s analytical facility in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso where routine gold analysis using a 50-gram charge and fire assay with an atomic absorption finish was completed. Quality control procedures included the systematic insertion of blanks, duplicates and sample standards into the sample stream. In addition, the Lab inserted its own quality control samples.